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Strategies & Market Trends : MDA - Market Direction Analysis -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: bobby beara who wrote (33582)11/17/1999 2:56:00 PM
From: donald sew  Respond to of 99985
 
Bobby,

Yes we are at some sort of a short-term top. The 5-DAY TRIN is prime, the VIX is prime, TYX and US DOLLAR are popping to the upside.

The question is how big will this pullback be. For now, I feel that the pullback will just be normal or small in size.

seeya



To: bobby beara who wrote (33582)11/17/1999 2:57:00 PM
From: pater tenebrarum  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 99985
 
Bobby, what nobody has yet commented on during the rally in the long bond, was the fact that t-bills continued their bear market unabated. in fact short term rates have shot up considerably. even the Fed funds rate recently came in at 5 7/8%, and that was before yesterday's tightening with the target still at 5 1/4%.
what does this signify? two things imo...one, a flattening yield curve is a sign that a deceleration in economic growth rates might be in the cards. two, demand for credit is probably extremely high. looking at the acceleration of the growth in all the monetary aggregates (M3, the broadest, now at an annualized 14,7% since 20 September) this is probably a reasonable assumption. the acceleration in money supply growth also explains the latest rally - if the spigot is as wide open as it is now, it doesn't matter if valuations are reasonable or not...stocks go up anyway.
this is probably the most irresponsible Fed ever, except perhaps it's '20's equivalent. they seem hell-bent to inflate the bubble beyond anything the world has ever seen. if AG does get another term, he will eventually find himself presiding over one hell of a mess.
check out the t-bills:

decisionpoint.com

btw, i personally feel that in spite of all the tinkering government data are subjected to, an enormous acceleration in inflation is almost a certainty. all over the world printing presses are running overtime, first in reaction to last year's crisis and now due to Y2K.
combine the possibility of Y2K supply disruptions with an ocean of money and you have all the ingredients for run-away inflation.
and of course, the final glorious blow-off in the equity markets....

regards,

hb

PS: Rydex ratios near all time lows:

decisionpoint.com

decisionpoint.com

the next pullback may well be of 'tradable' size....